Green-and-black fruiteater
The green-and-black fruiteater is a species of bird in the family Cotingidae, the cotingas. It is found in Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Venezuela.
Taxonomy and systematics
The green-and-black fruiteater was originally described as Ampelis riefferii. It was soon moved to its present genus Pipreola.The green-and-black fruiteater's further taxonomy is unsettled. The IOC and Birdlife International's Handbook of the Birds of the World assign it these six subspecies:
- P. r. occidentalis
- P. r. riefferii
- P. r. confusa Zimmer, JT, 1936
- P. r. chachapoyas
- P. r. melanolaema Sclater, PL, 1856
- P. r. tallmanorum O'Neill & Parker, TA, 1981
What is now the band-tailed fruiteater was originally described as a subspecies of the green-and-black fruiteater. Authors have suggested that both P. r. tallmanorum and P. r. melanolaema deserve full species status.
Description
The green-and-black fruiteater is long and weighs. The sexes have different plumage. Adult males of the nominate subspecies P. r. riefferii have an entirely blackish green head and upper breast with a yellow band around its base except on the nape. Their upperparts and tail are green and the wings mostly that color; the wing's tertials have white tips. Their underparts are yellow with black streaks that are heavier on the flanks than in the center. Females have a green head instead of the male's black and no yellow collar.The other subspecies of the green-and-black fruiteater differ from the nominate and each other thus:
- P. r. occidentalis: males have a greenish wash on the throat and chest and only faint white tertial tips
- P. r. confusa: smaller than nominate; greenish upper breast and heavy green streaks on underparts
- P. r. chachapoyas: smaller than nominate; heavy green streaks on underparts
- P. r. melanolaema: darker wings than nominate; males have black hood; females have faint yellow collar
- P. r. tallmanorum: smallest subspecies; brighter red eyes than nominate; male has very glossy black hood and unstreaked lower breast and belly; female has bolder underparts green streaks than nominate
Distribution and habitat
The green-and-black fruiteater has a disjunct distribution. The subspecies are found thus:- P. r. occidentalis: Colombia's Western Andes and south on the Andean west slope to El Oro Province in southwestern Ecuador
- P. r. riefferii: Colombia's Central and Eastern Andes into far western Venezuela's Táchira and Zulia states; the isolated Serranía del Perijá straddling the Colombia-Venezuela border
- P. r. confusa: eastern Andean slope through Ecuador slightly into northern Peru
- P. r. chachapoyas: eastern Andean slope in Peru from central Amazonas south to Huánuco Department
- P. r. melanolaema: Venezuelan Andes from central Táchira north into southern Lara; Venezuelan Coastal Range from Aragua east to Miranda
- P. r. tallmanorum: central Peru's Huánuco Department